In
this New Zealand horror movie a group of tourists on a yachting holiday
responds to a distress signal (something which you must never do when
you are a character in horror movie) and rescues an old Greek man (John
Rhys-Davies, best known as Indiana Jones? movie sidekick) from a deserted
fishing trawler.

But all isn't as it seems: the Greek has been using a
supernaturally-powered knife to cheat death for centuries now. Every time he
stabs someone with the knife, he exchanges bodies with that person. Handy
for when you're old and dying in an old age home and the young hospital
staff treat you like crap, that . . .

Pretty soon the tourists are engaged in a life-and-death struggle. The
ferryman

- who in
ancient Greek mythology ferried dead souls to the land of the dead
- is
however real and hot on the Greek's trail . . . but who will survive, and
who won't?

Well, the odds on the dumb-as-bricks flirtatious blonde is pretty much zero
-
hope we didn't spoil anything there. Luckily the titular Ferryman isn't some
kind of mysterious slasher in this movie, and while the body-jumping villain
idea isn't particular new or fresh either it makes for a minor change of
pace. Still, the concept could have gotten a better treatment than it does
here though: the movie is rarely scary and often over-the-top hysterical.

Still, the effects (though
not of the ferryman himself) are okay for a small budget feature such as
this and despite all the histrionics the acting isn't that bad. Still, some
weird directorial choices such as too many musical montage sequences and an
uneventful first forty minutes, er, threaten to sink the whole affair.
Nothing much is made of the plot scenario's philosophical dilemma though:
would you kill a complete stranger to cheat Death yourself?